Co-design for sustainable youth mental health in Australia
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(Published version)
Date
2024
Authors
Zabar, M.
Peng, F.
Davis, A.
Kueh, C.
Gwilt, I.
Editors
Niedderer, K.
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Book chapter
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Source details - Title: Design for Dementia, Mental Health and Wellbeing: Co-Design, Interventions and Policy, 2024 / Niedderer, K. (ed./s), Ch.3, pp.37-49
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Abstract
Youth mental health is a significant social issue garnering international attention. In Australia, young people experience disproportionately high rates of mental illness, coupled with limited uptake, retention, and adherence to psychological services and treatments. Co-design offers human-centric principles and practices to solve complex, systemic issues, such as those in the mental health domain. This chapter examines the application of co-design in mental health studies to build a novel approach to co-design research in the context of youth mental health. Literature from across mental health, co-design, positive and sustainable psychology, and the public policy discourse is reviewed and analysed through a design thinking lens. By identifying the strengths and limitations of the current literature, a Youth Mental Health Co-design Model is proposed. This augmented model draws on creative co-design methods, experience-based co-design, and low-contact co-design to offer a holistic approach to youth mental health research and practice. The model offers an integrated tool for researchers to build appropriate studies to support enquiry into youth mental health challenges ranging from co-design for production and solving discrete problems, through to design for transformation, solving complex, wicked problems.
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Copyright 2024 Routledge
Access Condition Notes: Accepted manuscript available after 1 July 2025